I don't really understand what point you're making here, Travis. Is this supposed to make me feel better in some way?Travis B. wrote: ↑Fri Oct 20, 2023 10:18 amDoes your average bigot make a difference between Palestinians and non-Palestinian Arabs or Muslims though? They seem perfectly willing to confuse Sikhs with them simply based on headgear and the typical color of their skin (re: the Oak Creek gurdwara massacre).Linguoboy wrote: ↑Fri Oct 20, 2023 10:02 amI'm always worried for the safety of my Jewish friends. They're never entirely safe even in the best of times and situations like these have a tendency of turning up the background anti-Semitism of society to the point that they become decidedly less so. I'm also used to worrying about the safety of my Muslim and Middle Eastern friends. What is disturbing and novel in this situation is seeing innocents targeted specifically on the basis of being Palestinian. I don't recall encountering that before in my lifetime, which probably means others haven't either, and I think that's worth drawing attention to, because--at least in this country--we're not attuned to it in the same way we are more generalised anti-Semitism or Islamophobia.bradrn wrote: ↑Thu Oct 19, 2023 6:47 pmNot in words, but you did immediately switched the topic to the safety of Palestinians. I’m certain you meant no harm from it — and of course it goes without saying that they deserve to feel 100% safe too, and any attacks on them are atrocious — but when everyone does this all the time, it does give me some idea about where people’s sympathies lie.
We literally have a neighbourhood here called "Little Palestine". It's in Bridgeview, about half an hour from where the attack that killed Wadea Al-Fayoume took place. If Chicago-area bigots want to carry out hate crimes specifically against Palestinians, they know exactly where to go. If they just want to attack any random "Arab", then not even my Latine friends are safe.
Dude, maybe read up sometime on a place called "India"? Or maybe you're only counting attacks in the USA? In that case, there's an organisation you should know called "Army of God", not to mention several attacks on synagogues and mosques where the assailants cited Christian scripture to justify their actions.
I'm with Travis that calling Northern Irish violence "religious terrorism" is a stretch. There's a common misconception that the perpetrators were religiously motivated when, in actual fact, many IRA operatives were outspokenly atheist and Marxist and the worst of the "Protestant" violence was pure opportunistic thuggery. As he says, this was a "civil" conflict in that it was, at its core, a struggle between two major social groups over power and resources. It just so happened in this case that--due to mainly historical reasons--religious confession became the major identifying feature distinguishing the two groups. The IRA didn't blow up British barracks because the British were Protestant (Catholic recruits died too) but because the UK was effectively re-colonising Northern Ireland.keenir wrote:Do the attacks in Japan by various small religions/cults count as religious terrorism or just terrorism? Ditto the various IRA & UVF groups.